Auteur Sujet: qbnv Superman roller coaster stalls in Calif., strands 12 riders about 150 feet  (Lu 42 fois)

MethrenRaf

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    • drwg The Quest TV Competition Turns Fantasy Into Reality Television
Bicp See the Faded Glory of Abandoned Theaters in Stages of Decay
 The deficit in the broadest measure of trade swelled to an all-time high of $144.9 billion in the first quarter of this year, reflecting Americans  insatiable appetite for foreign-made goods.The latest snapshot of trade activity, released by the Commerce Department on Friday, showed that the  current account  deficit was 14.1 percent larger than the $127 billion shortfall registered in the fourth quarter of 2003.The first-quarter s deficit figure was bigger than the $139.6 billion trade gap that some economists were forecasting and exceeded the previous record high of $138.2 billion set in the first quarter of 2003.The current account report is considered the best measure of a country s international economic standing because it tracks not just the g stanley cup oods and services reflected in the government s monthly trade reports but also investment flows between countries and unilateral transfers, including U.S. foreign aid payments.The nation s trade picture is among the issues that President Bush and presumptive Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry have sparred over as they campaign across the country to woo voters.         The trade deficit is one dark s stanley cup pot in an otherwise brightening economic picture of job growth, which is finally beginning to make u stanley quencher p ground lost earlier in the Bush presidency. The gap between exports and imports reflects stronger growth: Americans are buying more, and getting some of it from overseas.Mr. Bush says the best way to handle yawning trade deficit Frcp A foot-ing tribute for George H.W. Bush s birthday
 You ;ve got your remote cabins in the woods; your freaky laboratories; your Saw-like cellars; but the best setting for a horror movie just might be a 130-year-old paper manufacturing plant in London. This short vid shows a shadowed, moody take on how G. F. Smith produces sheets stanley becher  in a single hue in its Colorplan line. You ;ll never look at bright red the same again.      It   a novel take on the industrial process genre, which generally shows machines efficiently and reliably working their magic in a harshly-lit, straightforward way that leaves little to the imagination  hello, ramen! . These clips are often shot to demystify how a product is put together and what happens before it arrives fully formed on a shelf. Here, however, Ben Stevenson  and Made Thought created something genuinely creepy, but no less cool to watch. The combo of freaky, creaky score and the noise from the equipment itself makes for a chilling soundtrack, and once the dye starts pouring into the white pulp things get super dark and suggestive, super fast.  Spoiler alert: It looks a hell of a lot like blood.  [It   stanley website  Nice That]                       stanley botella                                   IndustrialProduction